Panasonic DMR-BW880 review
It's not often we see a product as complex as this Panasonic Blu-ray recorder. Roll up your sleeves – we're going in…
A quick straw poll – hands up if you read the manual. Anyone? Bueller…? But with Panasonic’s DMR-BW880, it isn’t so much desirable as essential that you take the time to digest the instructional blurb – all 124 pages of it.
That’s because, as hugely impressive as it is, we’ve seldom encountered a product as complex as this.
Even precisely defining it takes some thought. In basic terms, it’s a Blu-ray recorder with built-in 500GB hard-disk and twin Freeview HD tuners – so in that sense, it’s no great departure from DVD recorders of yore, save for its HD capabilities.
So much more than a recorder
But the DMR-BW880 is much more than a mere telly timeshifter. For example, you can use it to stream a variety of digital video and audio files over your network via DLNA, and it’ll also replay digital media via SD and USB.
If you prefer, you can record music directly to the hard-disk (with track, artist and title information from the Gracenote database), effectively making the Panasonic a music server. HD camcorders are well catered for, too – there’s a DV input and you can even record and edit your footage.
If all that wasn’t enough, the DMR-BW880 also supports the company’s Viera Cast service. So, connect it to your broadband and it’ll stream pics and video using Picasa and YouTube.
Nice. And the Panasonic’s a fine performer, too: off-air picture quality from HD and SD channels is first-rate, while recordings to hard-disk appear transparent to the quality of the original broadcast.
An amazing range of talents
It even stands up as a Blu-ray player, exhibiting many of the same strengths as its DMP-BD85 stablemate.
Yet as impressive as all this is, it’s hard to shake the feeling that this amazing range of talents (plus the jaw-dropping price) serves to narrow the appeal of the DMR-BW880.
There’s much to admire here: in many ways, what you’re looking at is the very apogee of convergence.
But it carries with it a heavy burden in sheer complexity, not helped by on-screen menus and guides that appear dated and baffling next to the slick affairs sported by simpler set-top-box rivals. The choice is yours…